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Πέμπτη 2 Ιουνίου 2016

How Neurononsense Keeps Women in Their Place - with Gina Rippon

                   



How Neurononsense Keeps Women in Their Place - with Gina Rippon





Δημοσιεύτηκε στις 1 Ιουν 2016
Have
new brain imaging techniques really revealed that women and men are
‘hardwired’ for their gender roles? Or has neuroscience become
misappropriated to justify gender gaps? Professor of cognitive
neuroimaging Gina Rippon investigates.
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Watch the Q&A: https://youtu.be/1swI97JbuUA

There
is a long history of debate about biological sex differences and their
part in determining gender roles, with the ‘biology is destiny’ mantra
being used to legitimise imbalances in these roles. The tradition is
continuing, with new brain imaging techniques being hailed as sources of
evidence of the ‘essential’ differences between men and women, and the
concept of ‘hardwiring’ sneaking into popular parlance as a brain-based
explanation for all kinds of gender gaps.

But the field is
littered with many problems. Some are the product of ill-informed
popular science writing (neurotrash) based on the misunderstanding or
misrepresentation of what brain imaging can tell us. Some, unfortunately
involve poor science, with scientists using outdated and disproved
stereotypes to design and interpret their research (neurosexism). These
problems obscure or ignore the ‘neuronews’, the breakthroughs in our
understanding of how plastic and permeable our brains are, and how the
concept of ‘hard-wiring’ should be condemned to the dustbin of
neurohistory.

This talk aims to offer ways of rooting out the neurotrash, stamping out the neurosexism and making way for neuronews.
Gina
Rippon is Professor of Cognitive Neuroimaging at Aston University. Her
research involves the application of brain imaging techniques,
particularly electroencephalography, (EEG) and magnetoencephalography
(MEG), to studies of normal and abnormal cognitive processes.




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